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Thousands of mourners gathered at the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village Monday night to remember the victims of the Orlando massacre.

The crowd filled Christopher Street outside the gay-rights landmark to share their grief and outrage over Sunday’s slaughter of 49 people at a Florida gay club by an Islamic fanatic.

Spectators watched from fire escapes and windows of nearby apartment buildings as chants of “Love beats hate” rang from the crowd.

At the end of the vigil, those gathered held candles, and many sobbed as the names of the victims were recited.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney lays flowers at a memorial for the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting outside the Stonewall Inn.G.N. MillerAndrew Cuomo and Sandra Lee lay flowers at the memorial.Getty Images

“There are a million emotions,” said Michael Robertson, 29. “I’m angry as hell. We’re all scared.”

Mayor de Blasio, his wife, Chirlane McCray, and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton addressed the crowd — and were sometimes heckled.

NYPD Chief of Department James O’Neill said that there were no specific threats against any gay bars or other locations in New York City but that copycat acts were always a concern.

“We are working closely with the LGBT community to figure out exactly where we need to put our assets,” he said.

A man had called a Midtown restaurant Sunday several hours after the Florida rampage — pledging his allegiance to ISIS and threatening violence, according to sources. Police determined the threat had no validity.

O’Neill said cops would continue providing security at LGBT landmarks and anywhere people may be gathering to grieve.

Six police cars were stationed outside the Stonewall — birthplace of the gay-rights movement in 1969 — earlier Monday as people left flowers and notes.

“We will be there for them, as we are every other day, but particularly in this time of need, in this time of needing, to reduce the fear that they are facing,” Bratton said.